Need for Culturally Competent and Responsive Cancer Education for African Immigrant Families and Youth Living in the United States.

IF 3.3 Q2 ONCOLOGY JMIR Cancer Pub Date : 2024-03-06 DOI:10.2196/53956
Olufunmilola Abraham, Adeola Agoke, Kazeem Sanuth, Abimbola Fapohunda, Motolani Ogunsanya, Megan Piper, Amy Trentham-Dietz
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Abstract

Cancer prevalence data for Black Americans is monolithic and fails to consider the diverse cultures and backgrounds within that community. For instance, African immigrants constitute a meaningful proportion of the foreign-born Black immigrants in the United States (42%), but the prevalence of cancer in the African immigrant community itself is unknown. Therefore, without accurate cancer prevalence data, it is impossible to identify trends and other key factors that are needed to support the health of African immigrants and their children. Moreover, it is impossible to understand how the culture and language of subgroups influence their cancer-related health behavior. While research in this area is limited, the existing literature articulates the need for culturally responsive and culturally tailored cancer education for African immigrants and their adolescent children, which is what we advocate for in this viewpoint paper. Existing projects demonstrate the feasibility of culturally responsive programming for adults; however, few projects include or focus on adolescents or children born to African immigrants. To best meet the needs of this understudied community, researchers must use culturally competent interventions alongside familiar, usable media. For adolescents, technology is ubiquitous thus, the creation of a culturally tailored digital intervention has immense potential to improve cancer awareness and prevention for youth and their community. More research is needed to address many of the existing research gaps and develop a rich understanding of the unique experience of cancer among African immigrant families that can be used to inform intervention development. Through this viewpoint, we review the current state of cancer-related research among African immigrant families in the United States. In this paper, we acknowledge the current knowledge gaps and issues surrounding measurement and then discuss the factors relevant to designing an educational intervention targeted at African immigrants and the role of African immigrant youth.

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需要为生活在美国的非洲移民家庭和青少年提供符合其文化背景并具有针对性的癌症教育。
美国黑人的癌症发病率数据是单一的,没有考虑到该社区内的不同文化和背景。例如,非洲移民在美国外国出生的黑人移民中占有相当大的比例(42%),但非洲移民社区本身的癌症发病率却不得而知。因此,如果没有准确的癌症发病率数据,就无法确定非洲移民及其子女健康所需的趋势和其他关键因素。此外,也无法了解亚群体的文化和语言如何影响他们与癌症有关的健康行为。虽然该领域的研究有限,但现有文献阐明了针对非洲移民及其青少年子女开展文化响应和文化定制癌症教育的必要性,这也是我们在本观点文件中所倡导的。现有的项目表明,针对成年人的文化敏感性计划是可行的;然而,很少有项目包括或关注青少年或非洲移民的子女。为了最大限度地满足这一未被充分研究的群体的需求,研究人员必须在使用熟悉的、可用的媒体的同时,使用具有文化适应性的干预措施。对于青少年来说,技术无处不在,因此,创造一种符合其文化背景的数字干预措施,对于提高青少年及其社区对癌症的认识和预防具有巨大的潜力。我们需要开展更多的研究,以弥补现有的许多研究空白,并对非洲移民家庭患癌的独特经历形成丰富的认识,从而为干预措施的开发提供依据。通过这一观点,我们回顾了美国非洲裔移民家庭癌症相关研究的现状。在本文中,我们承认目前的知识差距和围绕测量的问题,然后讨论与设计针对非洲移民的教育干预措施相关的因素以及非洲移民青年的作用。
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来源期刊
JMIR Cancer
JMIR Cancer ONCOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
64
审稿时长
12 weeks
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